[Apologies for Politech's unscheduled hiatus. I've been traveling
(speaking at the University of Pennsylvania a week ago and then
elsewhere on the east coast). I'm also finishing up my pilot's license
and have an check ride with an FAA examiner later this month, and that's
taking me more time than I had anticipated. I'll start going through the
Politech backlog, little by little, starting with the most recent. --Declan]
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Text of bill:
http://www.njleg.state.nj.us/2006/Bills/A1500/1327_I1.HTM
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http://news.com.com/The+problem+of+thin-skinned+politicos/2010-1028_3-6046090.html
Perspective: The problem of thin-skinned politicos
By Declan McCullagh
Published: March 6, 2006, 4:00 AM PST
A New Jersey politician is hoping to outlaw anonymous speech on the
Internet, claiming that civility must be mandatory in political debate.
State Assemblyman Peter J. Biondi, a Republican from Somerset County,
recently introduced legislation that would require any "public forum Web
site" to solicit the legal name and addresses of everyone who can post
messages to it.
What irks Biondi, a top Republican in the state assembly, is the
political free-for-all that has grown around the New Jersey
Star-Ledger's discussion site at NJ.com. The site's forum for Somerset
County--that is, Biondi's home district--is home to a slew of
pseudonymous posts that tend to be less than kind to local politicians.
[...remainder snipped...]
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